The General Bibliography is based on the sources most frequently cited in the individual bibliographies of volume VIII. It should not be regarded as providing a complete list of background materials for the history of Canada in the 19th century.

Section i describes the principal archival sources and is arranged by country. Section ii is divided into two parts: part a contains printed primary sources including documents published by the various colonial governments; part b provides a listing of the contemporary newspapers most frequently cited by contributors to the volume. Section iii includes dictionaries, indexes, inventories, almanacs, and directories. Section iv contains secondary works of the 19th and 20th centuries, including a number of general histories and theses. Section v describes the principal journals and the publications of various societies consulted.

I. ARCHIVAL SOURCES

CANADA

ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA, DIOCESE OF ONTARIO ARCHIVES, Kingston, Ont.

Records of various churches were consulted, in particular the following:

St George’s Cathedral (Kingston)

ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA, DIOCESE OF QUEBEC ARCHIVES, Lennoxville, Que. For a description of this archives, see: A. R. Kelley, “The Quebec diocesan archives; a description of the collection of historical records of the Church of England in the Diocese of Quebec,” ANQ Rapport, 1946–47: 181–298; [A.] M. Awcock, “Catalogue of the Quebec diocesan archives” (typescript, Shawinigan, Que., 1973; copy available at the archives).

47–71: Parish reports, correspondence, and other material relating to the parishes

52: Gaspé, Granby, Grand River, Grimsby, Grosse-Île, Guelph

71: Toronto, St Thomas, Valcartier,

Waterloo, Waterville, Williamsburgh, Woodhouse, Yonge, Whitby

82–100: Copies of letters and papers referring to Diocese of Quebec

99: 1844–45

105: Stewart letters

ANGLICAN CHURCH OF CANADA, DIOCESE OF TORONTO ARCHIVES.

Records of various churches were consulted, in particular those of the following:

Church of St Peter (Cobourg, Ont.)

St George the Martyr (Toronto)

ARCHIVES CIVILES. See Québec, Ministère de la Justice

ARCHIVES DE LA CHANCELLERIE DE L’ARCHEVÊCHÉ DE MONTRÉAL. A detailed inventory of many of the registers and files of this depository can be found in RHAF, 19 (1965–66): 652–64; 20 (1966–67): 146–66, 324–41, 669–700; 24 (1970–1971): 111–42

ARCHIVES DE L’ARCHIDIOCÈSE DE QUÉBEC. A guide to the collection is available in SCHÉC Rapport, 2 (1934–35): 65–73.

Series cited in volume VIII:

A: Évêques et archevêques de Québec

12 A: Registres des insinuations ecclésiastiques

20 A: Lettres manuscrites des évêques de Québec

210 A: Registres des lettres expédiées. Inventories of the correspondence of a number of the bishops of Quebec, compiled by Ivanhoë Caron, are available in ANQ Rapport [section iii].

22 A: Copies de lettres expédiées

C: Secrétairerie et chancellerie

CB: Structures de direction

1 CB: Vicaires généraux

CD: Discipline diocésaine

515 CD: Séminaire de Nicolet

61 CD: Paroisses

69 CD: Visites pastorales

81 CD: Congrégations religieuses féminines

Diocèse de Québec (in process of reclassification)

CM: Église universelle

10 CM: Correspondance de Rome

7 CM: États-Unis

90 CM: Angleterre

CN: Église canadienne

30 CN: Terre-Neuve

301 CN: Îles-de-la-Madeleine

31 CN: Maritimes

310 CN: Île-du-Prince-Édouard

311 CN: Nouveau-Brunswick

312 CN: Nouvelle-Écosse

320 CN: Haut-Canada

330 CN: Rivière-Rouge

331 CN: Saint-Boniface

36 CN: Colombie-Britannique

60 CN: Gouvernement du Canada

CP: Église du Québec

26 CP: Diocèse de Montréal

E: Administration temporelle

J: Société ecclésiastique Saint-Joseph

T: Papiers privés

U: Archives des missions, paroisses et institutions

ARCHIVES DE LA VILLE DE QUÉBEC. A useful publication of this repository is État sommaire des Archives de la ville de Québec(Québec, 1977), edited by Murielle Doyle-Frenière

Series cited in volume VIII:

I: Juges

1: Procès-verbaux des Sessions spéciales relatives

aux chemins et ponts

Il: Conseil de ville de la Corporation de la cité de

Québec

1: Procès-verbaux

a: Journal des procédés du Conseil de ville de la cité de Québec

b: Procès-verbaux du Conseil de ville Conseil et comités

V: Séries chemins

B: Juges de paix

VII: Série finances

E: Bureau des cotiseurs

1: Rôles d’évaluation et d’imposition

IX: Série police

ARCHIVES DE L’UNIVERSITÉ DE MONTRÉAL. The Service des archives of the Université de Montréal has prepared an important series of publications relating to its collections; a list of these can be found in Bibliographie des publications du Service des archives (3e éd., Montréal, 1980), compiled by Jacques Ducharme and Denis Plante.

The following collections were cited in volume VIII:

P 58: Collection Baby. The researcher may usefully consult the Catalogue de la collection François-Louis-Georges Baby, compiled by Camille Bertrand, with preface by Paul Baby and introduction by Lucien Campeau (2v., Montréal, 1971). Transcripts of the bulk of this collection, which is being classified at present, are located at the PAC.

A: Documents d’ordre familial

A2: Notes généalogiques et biographiques

A3: Contrats de mariage

A5: Successions et tutelles

C: Colonisation

C2: Ventes et échanges

G: Commerce et finance

G1: Grandes compagnies – fourrures

G2: Commerce, finance, affaires

U: Correspondance générale

P 79: Fonds famille Lacoste

ARCHIVES DU SÉMINAIRE DE NICOLET, Nicolet, Qué. This repository, which is at present classifying its materials, has a catalogue index and both nominal and thematic card indexes.

The following series were cited in volume VIII:

AO: Archives officielles

Polygraphie

Séminaire

AP: Archives privées

G: Grandes collections

L.-É. Bois

D: Documents historiques

G: Garde-notes

ARCHIVES DU SÉMINAIRE DE QUÉBEC. Analytical and chronological card indexes as well as numerous inventories are available in the archives

ARCHIVES DU SÉMINAIRE DE TROIS-RIVIÈRES, Trois-Rivières, Qué. A summary inventory for this repository was compiled by Yvon Thériault and published in ANQ Rapport, 1961–64: 67–134. A general inventory including the new classification system is in preparation.

The following were used in the preparation of volume VIII:

0009: Fonds Hart, famille

0032: Collection Montarville Boucher de la Bruère

0184: Fonds Dumoulin, famille

0296: Fonds J.-S.-N. Dumoulin

0368: Trifluviens du 19e et du 20e siècle

ARCHIVES NATIONALES DU QUÉBEC. In 1980 the archives undertook to establish a new uniform classification for its regional centres. Inventories, catalogues, guides, conversion tables, and useful finding aids on microfiche are available in all the regional centres of the ANQ.

RG 53: Records of the Department of the Provincial Secretary, recording office

ser.2-2: Index to patents by name

RG 55: Companies Division

ser.3: Toronto and York County, records of business partnership registration

ARCHIVES OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF HALIFAX

Collections cited in volume VIII include:

Edmund Burke papers

Thomas Louis Connolly papers

William Fraser papers

William Walsh papers

ARCHIVES OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF ST JOHN’S

Collections cited in volume VIII include:

Michael Anthony Fleming papers

John Thomas Mullock papers

ARCHIVES OF THE ARCHDIOCESE OF TORONTO

Material from the following series was cited in the preparation of volume VIII:

Series 1: Documents and letters relating to the history of the Catholic Church in the western part of the diocese of Upper Canada prior to the establishment of the diocese of Toronto, December 17th, 1841. An inventory of the series has been compiled by the Reverend

Gordon A. Bean (typescript, Toronto, 1970).

A: Administration of Bishop Alexander Macdonell

AB: Letters and papers of others, clergy and lay, involved in the history of the church

AC: Letters and other papers relating to

various missions in the diocese

C: Supplementary material

CA: Letters, arranged by sender

CB: Miscellaneous documents, arranged by place

ARCHIVES PAROISSIALES. The more noteworthy holdings of parish archives in Quebec are the registers of baptisms, marriages, and burials; copies are deposited with the Archives civiles of the judicial district in which the parish is located [see Québec, Ministère de la Justice]. Parish archives usually contain many other documents, including parish account-books, records of the fabriques, registers of parish confraternities, notebooks of sermons, and sometimes correspondence.

ATLANTIC BAPTIST HISTORICAL COLLECTION, Acadia University, Wolfville, N. S. Although outdated, A catalogue of the Maritime Baptist Historical Collection in the library of Acadia University (Kentville,

N.S., 1955) provides useful information on the collection

Collections cited in volume. VIII include:

Edward Manning papers

Records of various churches

BIBLIOTHÈQUE DE LA VILLE DE MONTRÉAL, SALLE GAGNON

The following were cited in volume VIII:

Collection Gagnon

Fonds Ægidius Fauteux

mss

BIBLIOTHÈQUE NATIONALE DU QUÉBEC, DÉPARTEMENT DES MANUSCRITS, Montréal. A description of the collections held in this department is found in Catalogue des manuscrits (Montréal), the latest edition of which was published in 1978.

MARITIME HISTORY GROUP ARCHIVES, Memorial University of Newfoundland, St John’s. For information on the collections held at the archives see Preliminary inventory of records held at the Maritime History Group, comp. Roberta Thomas under the direction of Keith Matthews ([St John’s, 1978]); Check list of research studies pertaining to the history of Newfoundland in the archives of the Maritime History Group(7th ed., [St John’s], 1984); and An index to the name files . . . , comp. Gert Crosbie under the direction of Keith Matthews ([St John’s], 1981). Various other indexes to individual collections at the archives are also available.

Materials cited in volume VIII include:

Name file collection. This collection consists of some 20,000 files, arranged by surname, concerning anyone connected in any way with the Newfoundland trade or fisheries, 1640–1850. The files are compiled from a wide range of sources, and each entry includes a reference to the original source.

METROPOLITAN TORONTO LIBRARY. Canadian History Department, Baldwin Room. For information on the library’s manuscript holdings, see Guide to the manuscript collection in the Toronto Public Libraries (Toronto, 1954)

E/B/B62.3: Blinkhorn, Thomas, commission as justice of the peace and magistrate

E/B/Si6: James Sinclair, correspondence outward

PROVINCIAL ARCHIVES OF MANITOBA, Winnipeg. This repository puts at the disposal of researchers a central card index and unpublished preliminary inventories and finding aids.

Materials used in the preparation of volume VIII:

MG 2: Red River settlement

A: Selkirk period

1: Selkirk, Thomas Douglas

5: Pelly, Robert Parker

B: Council of Assiniboia

2: Papers and financial records of

Council of Assiniboia

3: Census

4: Court records

4-1: Minutes of General Quarterly Court

C: Individuals and settlement

3: Cary, George Marcus

14: Ross, Alexander, family

38: Garrioch, Peter

MG 3: Red River disturbance, Northwest rebellion, and related papers

D: Louis Riel

MG 4: Canada

D: Government departments and agencies

13: Department of the Interior, Dominion

Lands Branch

MG 7: Church records and religious figures

B: Church of England

4: St Andrew’s Church

7: St John’s Cathedral

C: Presbyterian

12: Black, John

D: Roman Catholic

8: Saint-Boniface

MG 8: Immigration, settlement, and local histories

C: Genealogies

1: Lagimodière, Jean-Baptiste

MG 9: Literary manuscripts and theses

A: Manuscripts and related papers

76: MacLeod, M. A.

78: Gunn, G. H.

Hudson’s Bay Company Archives. The PRO and the PAC hold microfilm copies of the records for the years 1670 to 1870. For more information concerning the copies held at the PAC and the finding aids that are available, see General inventory, manuscipts, 3. The articles by R. H. G. Leveson Gower, “The archives of the Hudson’s Bay Company,” Beaver, outfit 264 (December 1933): 40–42, 64, and by Joan Craig, “Three hundred years of records,” Beaver, outfit 301 (autumn 1970): 65–70, provide useful information to researchers. For series of HBCA documents published by the HBRS, see section ii.

Section A: London office records

A.1/: London minute-books

A.5/: London correspondence books outward – general

A.6/: London correspondence books outward –

HBC official

A.8/: London correspondence with the British government

A.9/: Memorial books

A.10/: London inward correspondence – general

A.11/: London inward correspondence from HBC posts

A.12/: London inward correspondence from governors of HBC territories

A.16/: Officers’ and servants’ ledgers and account-books

A.21/: Officers’ and servants’ bill-books

A.31/: Lists of commissioned officers

A.32/: Servants’ contracts

A.33/: Commissioned officers’ indentures and agreements

A.34/: Servants’ characters and staff records

A.36/: Officers’ and servants’ wills

A.43/: Books of assignments of stock

A.44/: Register book of wills and administrations of proprietors, etc.

PROVINCIAL ARCHIVES OF NEW BRUNSWICK, Fredericton. The archives is in the process of reorganizing and reclassifying some material. As a result, individual references to PANB collections in volume VIII will not always correspond to those currently in use at the archives, although the old references are still usable for the purposes of location and retrieval. The following description is an attempt to indicate the latest changes as the volume goes to press. For information on the manuscript holdings, A guide to the manuscript collections in the Provincial Archives of New Brunswick, comp. A. C. Rigby (Fredericton, 1977) is useful.

PUBLIC ARCHIVES OF CANADA, Ottawa. The PAC has published guides to its holdings in the various divisions, including General guide series 1983, Federal Archives Division, compiled by Terry Cook and Glenn T. Wright (1983), and General guide series 1983, Manuscript Division, compiled by Grace Hyam and Jean-Marie LeBlanc (1984)

The following inventories to materials in the Manuscript and the Federal Archives divisions which were used in the preparation of volume VIII have been published:

Record groups, no.14: Records of parliament, 1775–1915; no.15: Department of the Interior; no.16: Department of National Revenue (1957)

Also useful are Census returns, 1666–1881, Public Archives of Canada (1982) and Checklist of parish registers (3rd ed., 1981). The catalogue of the holdings of the National Map Collection has been

printed in Catalogue of the National Map Collection, Public Archives of Canada, Ottawa, Ontario (16v., Boston, 1976).

The PAC publishes the Union list of mss [see section iii] which lists holdings of the Federal Archives and Manuscript divisions. It has also issued a Guide to Canadian photographic archives, ed. Christopher Seifried (1984). Addenda to published inventories, unpublished inventories of manuscript and record groups, and finding aids to individual collections are available at the PAC, which also makes available a large number of finding aids on microfiche.

[CO 42]. Q series. The Q transcripts were prepared by the PAC before the PRO reorganization of 1908–10 and include most of what is now in CO 42 up to the year 1841, plus material now found in CO 43, as well as items from other series. Documents for the period covered by volume VIII are calendared in PAC Report, 1893, 1899–1901, 1941–42.

[CO 217]. Nova Scotia A; Cape Breton A. From 1802 the transcripts in these series are from PRO, CO 217. Documents of Nova Scotia A for the period covered by volume VIII have been calendared in PAC Report, 1947.

[CO 226]. Prince Edward Island A. For the period prior to 1820 this is a composite series of transcripts derived primarily from sources now in PRO, CO 226, but also including material copied from the Dartmouth papers (PAC, MG 23, A1). Post-1820 documents are from CO 226

3: Upper Canada: submissions to the Executive Council on state matters

14: Executive Council office: correspondence and records of the clerk

L: Land records

1: Minute-books (land matters)

3: Upper Canada and Canada: petitions for land grants and leases

3L: Quebec and Lower Canada: land petitions and related records

6: Departmental records

B: Surveyor general’s records, Lower Canada, Upper Canada, Canada

7: Miscellaneous records

RG 4: Civil and Provincial secretaries’ offices:

Quebec, Lower Canada, and Canada East

A: Secretaries’ correspondence, 1764–1841

1: S series

B: Office records

8: Notaries and advocates: applications for licences as

15: Land records

20: Pardons, petitions for

28: Bonds, licences, and certificates

30: School records

36: Municipal records

37: Rebellion records

46: Miscellaneous records relating to Lord Selkirk’s colony and the Red River disturbances

58: Customs records

C: Provincial secretary’s correspondence, 1841–67

l: Numbered correspondence

RG 5: Civil and Provincial secretaries’ offices:

Upper Canada and Canada West

A: Secretaries’ correspondence

1: Upper Canada sundries

B: Miscellaneous records

3: Petitions and addresses

9: Bonds, licences, and certificates

11: Education, records relating to

25: Election returns, Upper Canada and Canada West

26: Statistical returns

36: Records of the London District magistrates relating to the treason hearings

C: Provincial secretary’s correspondence

1: Numbered correspondence files

2: Letter-books

RG 7: Governor General’s Office

G1: Dispatches from the Colonial Office

G7: Dispatches from the lieutenant governors to

the governor general

G8B: Records from the Office of the Lieutenant Governor of New Brunswick

G12: Letter-books of dispatches to the Colonial Office

G14: Miscellaneous records

G20: Civil secretary’s correspondence

RG 8: British military and naval records

I: C series (British military records)

IV: Vice-Admiralty Court records

RG 9: Department of Militia and Defence

I: Pre-confederation records

A: Adjutant General’s Office, Lower Canada

5: Registers of officers

6: Officers’ commissions

7: Nominal rolls and paylists

B: Adjutant General’s Office, Upper Canada

1: Correspondence

2: Returns and nominal orders

5: Registers of officers

7: Nominal rolls and paylists

C: Adjutant-General’s Office

1: Correspondence

RG 10: Indian affairs

A: Administrative records of the imperial government

1: Records of the governor general and the lieutenant governors

1–7: Upper Canada, civil control

486–87: Lower Canada, civil control

712–13: Petitions

2: Records of the Superintendent’s Office

8–21: Superintendent General’s Office

22–25: Chief Superintendent’s Office correspondence

26–46: Deputy Superintendent General’s Office, correspondence

3: Record of the military

488–97: Military Secretary’s Office, Montreal

4: Records of the Chief Superintendent’s Office, Upper Canada

47–77: Correspondence

124–39, 739, 748, 751: Jarvis correspondence

498–509, 749: Letter-books

5: Records of the Civil Secretary’s Office

142–262, 752–60: Correspondence

263–72: General administration records

510–20: Letter-books

6: General office files

718–19: Macaulay report

720–21: Commissions of inquiry

1011: Paudash papers

B: Ministerial administration records

8: General headquarters administration records

802: J. B. Clench

999A: Census records

C: Field Office records

I: Superintendency records

2: Western (Sarnia) superintendency

442–47A: General administration files

569–71: Letter-books

10017: Blue books

D: Indian land records

10: Treaties and surrenders

661, 769: Surrenders

RG 11: Department of Public Works

A: Board of Works records

1: Official correspondence

1–39: Registered correspondence

40–77, 148: Correspondence in subject files

2: Registers and indexes

93–95: Subject registers

3: Minutes, letter-books, and reports

116–31: Letter-books

RG 16: Department of National Revenue

A: Customs, excise, and inland revenue

l: Correspondence and returns

RG 19: Department of Finance

RG 30: Canadian National Railways

1–22: Great Western Railway

361–63: Hamilton and Toronto Railway

484–88: Toronto and Guelph Railway

1000–55: Grand Trunk Railway, minutes

1596–98, 2028–29: Ontario, Simcoe and

Huron Union Railroad

RG 31: Statistics Canada

A: Census Division

l: Census records

RG 42: Marine Branch

I: Shipping registers

RG 43: Department of Railways and Canals

C: Canal Branch records

V: St Lawrence canals

1: Commission for Improving the Navigation on the River St Lawrence

VI: Welland Canal

2: Welland Canal

C: General and departmental correspondence

RG 68: Registrar general

PUBLIC ARCHIVES OF NOVA SCOTIA, Halifax. For a description of the collections see Inventory of manuscripts in the Public Archives of Nova Scotia (Halifax, 1976)

Materials used in the preparation of volume VIII include:

MG 1: Papers of families and individuals

226–27: Enos Collins papers

238: Elizabeth [Ruggles] Coward documents

334: Sir Brenton Halliburton papers

544: T. H. Lodge collection, genealogies

550–58: Thomas McCulloch papers

753: Harry Piers papers

793: Simon B. Robie documents

797B: Sargent family documents

799–805: Shannon family papers

817–63: Thomas B. Smith, genealogy

914B: Thomas Trotter papers

926: Richard J. Uniacke papers

979–80: Peleg Wiswall documents

1490: James Boyle Uniacke papers

1595–1613: Bliss family papers

1729: McLelan papers

1769: Crofton James Uniacke papers

MG 2: Political papers

719–25: George Renny Young papers

726–30: John Young papers

731–83: Sir William Young papers

1250–55: John Howard Sinclair papers

MG 3: Business papers

28: John Quirk, Bridgetown, register

295–98: Joseph Rudolf, Rudolf’s Cove, account-books, ledgers

299: William Rudolf, Rudolf’s Cove, daybook

300: William Crane, Sackville, ledger

MG 4: Churches and communities

James Presbyterian Church (New Glasgow), records (mfm. )

94–105: Lunenburg County genealogies, comp. E. A. Harris

190–215: Universalist Unitarian Church (Halifax), records

MG 5: Cemeteries

MG 9: Scrap-books

no.45: Scrap-book on counties

no.225: History of the Nova Scotia Light and Power Co. Ltd., no.1

MG 12: Great Britain, Army

HQ: Headquarters papers, Nova Scotia

1–94: General orders

MG 15: Ethnic collections

3–7: Indians

MG 20: Societies and special collections

153: Free Church College

MG 100: Documents, newspaper clippings, and miscellaneous items

RG 1: Bound volumes of Nova Scotia records for

the period 1624–1867

29–185: Documents relating to the government

of Nova Scotia: dispatches, letter-

books, and commission books

186–214½H: Council, minutes

215–218DDD: Legislative Council, journals

219–85: Miscellaneous documents

286–300: Legislative Council, selections from the files

301–14: Legislative Assembly, selections from the files

410–17: Papers of the settlement of Halifax

430–32: Indians

438–39: Schools and school lands

440–42: Nova Scotia militia

443–54: Census and poll tax

RG 5: Records of the Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia

A: Assembly papers

E: Election writs

GP: Governor’s petitions

P: Petitions

U: Unpassed bills

RG 7: Records of the provincial secretary of Nova

Scotia

1–142: Letters received

RG 8: Records of the Central Board of Agriculture of Nova Scotia

RG 13: Customs

22–28: Halifax port records

RG 14: Education

RG 20: Lands and Forests

A: Land grants and petitions

B: Cape Breton land papers

C: Crown lands

13–50, 85–93: Land grants, county papers

RG 22: Nova Scotia, military records

RG 24: Post Office records of Nova Scotia

RG 25: Public health

RG 28: Railways

RG 31: Treasury

102–20: Impost, excise, and revenue

RG 32: Vital statistics

6–86: Deaths

132–69: Marriage bonds

RG 34: Court of General Sessions of the Peace

312: Halifax County

RG 35A: Halifax city and county assessments

1–4: Halifax city assessments

RG 36: Chancery Court

RG 39: Supreme Court

J: Judgement books

M: Miscellaneous

PUBLIC ARCHIVES OF PRINCE EDWARD ISLAND, Charlottetown.

Materials used in the preparation of volume VIII include:

Acc. 2316: P.E.I. letter-books, Robert Bruce Stewart and David Stewart

2353: John Mackieson, diaries

2524: Miscellaneous documents

2552: Miscellaneous documents

2664: Copies of MacDonald family papers in possession of Jean and Colin MacDonald, St Peters, P.E.I.

2685: Port Hill papers

2702: Smith-Alley collection

2716: Correspondence donated by Niel

Morison, Tobermory, Scotland

2810: Ira Brown papers

2825: MacNutt family papers

2849: Palmer family papers

3466: P.E.I. Heritage Foundation collection

RG l: Lieutenant Governor, commission books

RG 3: House of Assembly, journals

RG 5: Executive Council

Minutes’

Petitions

RG 6: Courts

Court of Chancery

Supreme Court

RG 8: Warrant books

RG 15: Crown lands, leases

RG 16: Registry Office, land registry records

Conveyance registers

RG 18: Census records

RG 20: City of Charlottetown records

QUÉBEC, MINISTÈRE DE LA JUSTICE. The Archives civiles and the Archives judiciaires du Québec, which are under the joint jurisdiction of the courts and the Ministère de la Justice, are now separate repositories as a result of the reclassification of the former Archives judiciaires. They are deposited at the court-houses in the administrative centres of the 34 judicial districts of Quebec.

ARCHIVES CIVILES. These archives retain documents for the last 100 years, including registers of births, marriages, and deaths, notaries’ minutiers (minute-books), and records of surveyors active in the district. Earlier documents are held by the ANQ.

A list of the judicial districts and registry offices can be found in The Quebec legal telephone directory, ed. Andrée Frenette-Lecoq (Montreal, 1980).

QUÉBEC, MINISTÈRE DES AFFAIRES CULTURELLES, CENTRE DE DOCUMENTATION, Québec. The Ministère des Affaires culturelles has consolidated into one documentation centre the collections of all its previously existing centres, including that of the Inventaire des biens culturels.

The following materials were used in the preparation of volume VIII:

Fonds Morisset

1: Architecture et oeuvres d’art par localité

2695: Journal de François Baillairgé

2: Artistes et artisans

B157/T454: Baillairgé, Pierre-Florent

B853.5/P662.97: Brien, dit Desrochers, Urbain

F249/G537.5: Fassio, Gerome

H243/J27.5/2: Hanna, James

H243.1/J27.5/2: Hanna, James Godfrey

M829.2/P324: Morand, Paul

N845/F825: Normand, François

P219.7/A555/2: Paquet, dit Lavallée, André

R754/P324: Rollin, Paul

V855.5/L: Vivant, Laurent

QUEEN’S UNIVERSITY ARCHIVES, Kingston, Ont. For information on the collection see A guide to the holdings of Queen’s University Archives (Kingston, 1978).

Materials used in volume VIII include:

William Bell papers

John Solomon Cartwright papers

John Macaulay papers

William Morris papers

Presbyterian Church of Canada in connection with

the Church of Scotland, Synod papers

Queen’s University records

Queen’s University letters

UNITED CHURCH ARCHIVES. The present-day United Church Archives is a descendant of 19th- and 20th-century archival collections of various Canadian Methodist, Presbyterian, Congregational, and Evangelical/United Brethren in Christ bodies. The Central Archives of the United Church of Canada at Victoria University, Toronto, is national in scope. Material of local interest, including the official records of the conferences concerned, is housed in regional conference archives.

CENTRAL ARCHIVES, Toronto

Materials used in volume VIIIinclude:

Bible Christian Church in Canada records

Biography files

James Croil papers, diary, 1866–67

Glasgow Colonial Society, correspondence

MARITIME CONFERENCE ARCHIVES, Halifax.

Official records, especially those of the following bodies, were used in volume VIII:

GENERAL REGISTER OFFICE, London. Death and marriage records for various individuals were consulted in the preparation of volume VIII.

GENERAL REGISTER OFFICE FOR SCOTLAND, Edinburgh. Information concerning the parish registers held by the GRO is available in the Detailed list of old parochial registers of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1872). Registers of baptisms, marriages, and burials for several Scottish parishes were used in the preparation of volume VIII.

NATIONAL LIBRARY OF SCOTLAND, Department of Manuscripts, Edinburgh. Information on the manuscript collections is available in Catalogue of manuscripts acquired since 1925 (5v. to date [1–4, 6], Edinburgh, 1938– ), and in Summary catalogue of the Advocates’ manuscripts (Edinburgh, 1971). Descriptions of some materials concerning Canada appear in A guide to manuscripts relating to America in Great Britain and Ireland, ed. J. W. Raimo (Westport, Conn., 1979), and in Britain and the Dominions: a guide to business and related records in the United Kingdom concerning Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa, comp. C. A. Jones (Boston, 1978).

Materials used in the preparation of volume VIII include:

Advocates’ manuscripts

Adv. mss 46.1.1–46.10.2: Murray papers

Deposits

Deposit no. 298: Church of Scotland, Overseas Council records

Manuscripts

mss 2264–505, 2568–608, 3022: Cochrane papers

mss 3430–49: Lee papers

mss 4007–131: Blackwood’s letter file

mss 15001–195: Ellice papers

PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE, London. For an introduction to the holdings and arrangement of this archives see Guide to the contents of the Public Record Office (3v., London, 1963–68). For copies of PRO documents available at the PAC see General inventory, manuscripts, 2.

The following series were used in the preparation of volume VIII: Admiralty

Methodist Missionary Society Archives. Canadian material was microfilmed by the PAC in 1955, when the originals were held by the Methodist Missionary Society; see PAC, General inventory, manuscripts, 3.

Wesleyan Methodist Missionary Society Correspondence, North America

SCOTTISH RECORD OFFICE, Edinburgh. A comprehensive listing of materials relating to Canada is provided by the SRO’s “List of Canadian documents” (typescript, 1977, with updates to 1983). An appendix records Canadian documents in private archives as surveyed by the National Reg. of Arch. (Scotland). This guide is based on an earlier compilation, A source list of manuscripts relating to the U.S.A. and Canada in private archives preserved in the Scottish Record Office (Edinburgh, 1970), and is available at the PAC, all provincial archives, and other selected Canadian institutions. Some items are also described in A guide to manuscripts relating to America in Great Britain and Ireland, ed. J. W. Raimo (Westport, Conn., 1979), and Britain and the Dominions: a guide to business and related records in the United Kingdom concerning Australia, Canada, New Zealand, and South Africa, comp. C. A. Jones (Boston, 1978).

RS 14: Particular register of sasines for the shire of Ayr and bailieries of Kyle, Carrick and Cunninghame

SC: Scottish Sheriff Courts

SC70: Sheriff Court of Lothians and Peebles (commissary business)

UNITED SOCIETY FOR THE PROPAGATION OF THE GOSPEL, London. The archives is in the process of reorganizing and reclassifying some material. Thus classifications used by Canadian archives holding USPG microfilm do not always correspond to those of the archives itself. For information about materials relating to Canada, see William Westfall and Ian Pearson, “The archives of the United Society for the Propagation of the Gospel and Canadian history,” CCHS Journal, 25 (1983): 16–24. For copies of USPG documents available at the PAC, see General inventory, manuscripts, 3.

The following were consulted:

C/CAN: Unbound letters from Canada, 1752–1860. Letters from New Brunswick, Newfoundland, Nova Scotia, and Quebec groupings were used. A nominal card index is available at USPG

D: Original letters received from 1850, bound in volumes. A handlist of writers and places is available at USPG.

E: Reports from SPG missionaries from 1856, bound in volumes. A handlist is available at USPG.

X: Miscellaneous volumes and papers, 18th–20th centuries

Journal of proceedings of the Society for the Propagation of the Gospel. Comprises bound and indexed volumes of the proceedings of the general meetings held in London from 1701, and four appendices, A, B, C, D (1701–1860).

UNITED STATES

BAKER LIBRARY, Harvard University, Graduate School of Business Administration, Boston.

The following material was consulted in the preparation of volume VIII:

R. G. Dun collection

Manuscript credit ledgers, Canada

GENEALOGICAL SOCIETY OF THE CHURCH OF JESUS CHRIST OF LATTER-DAY SAINTS, Salt Lake City, Utah. As a result of the Mormons’ international microfilming program, over a million rolls of microfilmed records of genealogical interest, including parish registers, land grants, deeds, probate records, marriage bonds, and cemetery records, are available in the church’s central library and through its branch libraries, as well as at various archives.

GS microfilms cited in volume VIII consist primarily of copies of Ontario land registry office records available at the AO. These references are entered under the name of the Land Registry Office where the original documents are located; when the location of the original record is not known, a reference to the GS microfilm roll is entered under the name of the repository in which it was consulted.

The Arthur papers; being the Canadian papers ,mainly confidential, private, and demi-official of Sir George Arthur, K.C.H., last lieutenant-governor of Upper Canada, in the manuscript collection of the Toronto Public Libraries. Edited

Appendix to the . . . journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada/Appendice . . . des journaux de la province du Canada, 1841–59. Continued by Canada, Province of, Parliament/Parlement, Sessional papers/Documents de la session. See also The Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada: an index to journal appendices and

Journals of the Legislative Assembly of the Province of Canada/Journaux de l’Assemblée législative de la province du Canada, 1841–59.

LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL/CONSEIL LÉGISLATIF

Journals of the Legislative Council of the Province of Canada/Journaux du Conseil législatif de la province du Canada, 1841–61.

PARLIAMENT/PARLEMENT

Sessional papers/Documents de la session, 1860–66.

Statutes of the Province of Canada . . ./Statuts de la province du Canada . . . , 1841–57. The statutes were published under the title Provincial statutes of Canada/Les statuts provinciaux du Canada from 1841 to 1851.

PUBLICATIONS

For a critical bibliography of the English-language publications of the Province of Canada, see Bishop, Pubs. of government of Prov. of Canada [section iii].

Canada Gazette. Kingston; Montreal; Toronto; Quebec; Ottawa. Official publication of the government of the Province of Canada, published weekly from 2 Oct. 1841 to 26 June 1869. The journal moved to follow the seat of government.

The Canadian North-West, its early development and legislative records; minutes of the councils of the Red River colony and the Northern Department of Rupert’s Land. Edited by Edmund Henry Oliver. (PAC publications, 9.) 2 vols. Ottawa, 1914–15.

Catholic Church records of the Pacific northwest: Vancouver, volumes I and II, and Stellamaris mission. Translated by Mikell de Lores Wormell Warner and annotated by Harriet Duncan Munnick. St Paul, Oreg., 1972.

CHAMPLAIN SOCIETY, Toronto PUBLICATIONS

53 vols. to date, exclusive of the Hudson’s Bay Company series [see HBRS], the Ontario series, and the unnumbered series. Issued only to elected members of the society who are limited in numbers

13–15, 17: Select British docs. of War of 1812 (Wood)

22: Docs. relating to NWC (Wallace).

24: Hargrave, Hargrave corr. (Glazebrook).

28: Mactavish, Letters of Letitia Hargrave (MacLeod)

ONTARIO SERIES

11 vols. to date. Available for sale to the general public.

1: Valley of the Trent (Guillet).

5: Town of York, 1793–1815 (Firth).

8: Town of York, 1815–34 (Firth).

COX, ROSS. Adventures on the Columbia River, including the narrative of a residence of six years on the western side of the Rocky Mountains, among various tribes of Indians hitherto unknown: together with a journey across the American continent. 2 vols. London, 1831. Another edition. 1 vol. New York, 1832.

[CROIL, JAMES.] A historical and statistical report of the Presbyterian Church of Canada, in connection with the Church of Scotland, for the year 1866. Montreal, 1867. 2nd edition. 1868.

Documentary history of education in Upper Canada from the passing of the Constitutional Act of 1791 to the close of Rev. Dr. Ryerson’s administration of the Education Department in 1876. Edited by John George Hodgins. 28 vols. Toronto, 1894–1910.

1: Simpson, George. Journal of occurrences in the Athabasca Department by George Simpson, 1820 and 1821, and report. Edited by Edwin Ernest Rich, with an introduction by Chester [Bailey] Martin. Toronto, 1938.

3: Minutes of Council, Northern Department of RupertLand, 1821–31. Edited by Robert Harvey Fleming, with an introduction by Harold Adams Innis. Toronto, 1940.

4: McLoughlin, John. The letters of John McLoughlin from Fort Vancouver to the governor and committee, first series, 1825–38. Edited by Edwin Ernest Rich, with an introduction by William Kaye Lamb. London, 1941.

6: McLoughlin, John. The letters of John McLoughlin from Fort Vancouver to the governor and committee, second series, 1839–44. Edited by Edwin Ernest Rich, with an introduction by William Kaye Lamb. London, 1943

7: McLoughlin, John. The letters of John McLoughlin from Fort Vancouver to the governor and committee, third series, 1844–46. Edited by Edwin Ernest Rich, with an introduction by William Kaye Lamb. London, 1944.

10: Simpson, George. Part of dispatch from George Simpson, esqr, governor of Ruperts Land, to the governor & committee of the Hudson’s Bay Company, London, March 1, 1829; continued and completed March 24 and June 5, 1829. Edited by Edwin Ernest Rich, with an introduction by William Stewart Wallace. Toronto, 1947.

The Acts of the General Assembly of her majesty’s province of New Brunswick, from the twenty sixth year of the reign of King George the Third to the sixth year of the reign of King William the Fourth [1786–1836]. Revised and corrected by George F. S. Berton. Fredericton, 1838.

HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY

Journal. Fredericton, 1816–53.

LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

Journal. Fredericton, 1831–50. The pre-1831 journals were published as Journal of the Legislative Council of the province of New Brunswick . . . [1786–1830] . 2 vols. Fredericton, 1831.

NEWFOUNDLAND

Blue book, 1836.

HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY

Journal, 1832–57.

LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

Journal, 1837–49.

New light on the early history of the greater northwest: the manuscript journals of Alexander Henry, fur trader of the Northwest Company, and of David Thompson, official geographer and explorer of the same company, 1799–1814. . . . Edited by Elliott Coues. 3 vols. New York, 1897; reprinted 3 vols. in 2, Minneapolis, Minn., [1965].

NOVA SCOTIA

Acts of the General Assembly. Halifax, 1829–48. Title varies; see Bishop, Pubs. of governments of N.S., P.E.I., N.B. [section iii].

HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY

Journal and proceedings. Halifax, 1800–54.

LEGISLATIVE COUNCIL

Debates and proceedings. Halifax, 1858–60.

Journal and proceedings. Halifax, 1836–60.

“Parliamentary debates.” Canadian Library Association project to microfilm the debates of the legislature of the Province of Canada and the parliament of Canada for the period 1846–74.

Presbyterian: a Missionary and Religious Record of the Presbyterian Church of Canada in Connection with the Church of Scotland. Montreal. 1 (1848)–28 (1875).

ROBB, JAMES, AND ELLEN [COSTER] ROBB. The letters of James and Ellen Robb; portrait of a Fredericton family in early Victorian times. Edited by Alfred Goldsworthy Bailey. Fredericton, 1983.

ROSS, ALEXANDER. Adventures of the first settlers on the Oregon or Columbia River: being a narrative of the expedition fitted out by John Jacob Astor, to establish the “Pacific Fur Company”; with an account of some Indian tribes on the coast of the Pacific. London, 1849; reprinted Ann Arbor, Mich., [1966].

Select British documents of the Canadian War of 1812. Edited with an introduction by William [Charles Henry] Wood. (Champlain Society publications, 13–15, 17.) 3 vols. in 4. Toronto, 1920–28; reprinted New York, 1968.

––––––Fur trade and empire: George Simpson’s journal, “Remarks connected with the fur trade in the course of a voyage from York Factory to Fort George and back to York Factory, 1824–1825. . . .” Edited with an introduction by Frederick Merk. (Harvard historical studies, 31.) Cambridge, Mass., and London, 1931. Revised edition. Edited with a new introduction by Frederick Merk. Cambridge, 1968.

Statistical account of Upper Canada, compiled with a view to a grand system of emigration. Compiled by Robert [Fleming] Gourlay. 2 vols. London, 1822; reprinted East Ardsley, Eng., and New York, 1966. Abridged and with an introduction by Stanley Robert Mealing. (Carleton library series, 75.) 1 vol. Toronto, 1974.

The town of York, 1793–1815: a collection of documents of early Toronto. Edited by Edith Grace Firth. (Champlain Society publications, Ontario series, 5.) Toronto, 1962.

The town of York, 1815–1834: a further collection of documents of early Toronto. Edited by Edith Grace Firth. (Champlain Society publications, Ontario series, 8.) Toronto, 1966.

“United Empire Loyalists: enquiry into the losses and services in consequence of their loyalty; evidence in the Canadian claims.” AO Report, 1904.

UPPER CANADA

HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY

Appendix to the journal, 1835–1839/40.

Journal, 1821, 1825–1839/40. For the period from 1792 to 1824, see “Journals of Legislative Assembly of U.C.,” AO Report, 1909, 1911–14.

The following newspapers were particularly useful in the preparation of volume VIII. Numerous sources have been used to determine their various titles and their dates of publication. The printed sources include, for all areas of the country: CLA, Canadian newspapers on microfilm, catalogue (2 pts. in 3, Ottawa, 1959–69), Union list of Canadian newspapers held by Canadian libraries/Liste collective des journaux canadiens disponibles dans les bibliothèques canadiennes (Ottawa, 1977), and, for pre-1800 newspapers, Marie Tremaine, A bibliography of Canadian imprints, 1751–1800 (Toronto, 1952); for New Brunswick: J. R. Harper, Historical directory of New Brunswick newspapers and periodicals (Fredericton, 1961); for Newfoundland: “Chronological list of Newfoundland newspapers in the public collections at the Gosling Memorial Library and Provincial Archives,” comp. Ian MacDonald (copy in the Provincial Reference Dept., Nfld. Public Library Services, St John’s), and Serials holdings in the libraries of Memorial University of Newfoundland and St. John’s Public Library: alphabetical list, comp. C. D. Evans (8th ed., 2v., St John’s, 1973); for Nova Scotia: D. C. Harvey, “Newspapers of Nova Scotia, 1840–1867,” CHR, 26 (1945): 279–301, G. E. N. Tratt, A survey and listing of Nova Scotia newspapers, 1752–1957, with particular reference to the period before 1867 (Halifax, 1979), and An historical directory of Nova Scotia newspapers and journals before confederation, comp. T. B. Vincent (Kingston, Ont., 1977); for Ontario: Catalogue of Canadian newspapers in the Douglas Library,

Acadian Recorder. Halifax. Published from 16 Jan. 1813 to 26 June 1869 as a weekly. A tri-weekly began on 5 Sept. 1864, and was joined by a daily on 1 Dec. 1868. Both editions ceased publication in May 1930.

L’Avenir. Montréal. Published from 24 June 1847 to 22 Dec. 1857.

Bathurst Courier. Perth, Ont. Published as a weekly under various titles from 8 Aug. 1834 to the present. Until 7 Aug. 1835 its full title was the Bathurst Courier and Ottawa Gazette; it continued as the Bathurst Courier and Ottawa General Advertiser until 30 June 1846, when the second half of the title was dropped. On 13 Nov. 1857 it became the Perth Courier.

British Colonist. Halifax. Its full title initially was British Colonist: a Literary, Political and Commercial Journal. Published from 25 July 1848 until 31 Dec. 1874 as a tri-weekly; a weekly was added in January 1849 and a daily on 13 Dec. 1869. From 11 Sept. 1851 until 20 Jan. 1855, the title was British Colonist, and North American Railway Journal.

British Colonist. Toronto. Began as a weekly on 1 Feb. 1838 and became a semi-weekly in August 1843. The Daily Colonist began in November 1851 and the News of the Week, or Weekly Colonist in August 1852. The daily and semi-weekly editions had ceased publication by September 1860, but the News of the Week continued until December 1861.

British Whig. Kingston, Ont. Began publication as a semi-weekly in February 1834. The paper became the British Whig, and General Advertiser for the Midland District on 25 Jan. 1835, and by the 1840s it was the British Whig, and General Advertiser for Canada West. A weekly from January 1849 (when a daily edition also began publication [see Daily British Whig]) until 1897, it assumed the title Weekly British Whig on 15 June 1849.

Brockville Recorder. Brockville, Ont. Published

weekly from 16 Jan. 1821 until 22 Feb. 1957, it was issued as the Brockville Recorder, and the Eastern, Johnstown, and Bathurst Districts Advertiser until 15 July 1847, as the Brockville Recorder and Advertiser, for the Eastern, Johnstown, and Bathurst Districts from 22 July 1847 to 26 Dec. 1850, and as the Brockville Recorder and Advertiser from 9 Jan. 1851 to 25 Aug. 1853; beginning with the issue of 1 Sept. 1853 it became simply the Brockville Recorder.

Bytown Gazette, and Ottawa and Rideau Advertiser. Ottawa. Published from 9 June 1836 until around 1861 under various titles.

Canadian Freeman. Toronto. Published weekly from 1825 until August 1834.

Le Canadien. Québec. Published from 22 Nov. 1806 to 11 Feb. 1893.

Christian Guardian. Toronto. Published as a weekly from 21 Nov. 1829 until 10 June 1925 when it was superseded by the New Outlook, which was in turn succeeded by the United Church Observer on 1 March 1939. A general index of the Christian Guardian for the years 1829–67 is available at the UCA.

Chronicle & Gazette. Kingston, Ont. Published as a weekly from 29 June 1833 to 1834, as a semi-weekly from 1835 to 1847, and again as a weekly to about 1899. Its full name was Chronicle & Gazette and Kingston Commercial Advertiser until 1840 when the last part of the title was dropped, and from 1847 it was the Chronicle and News. A daily edition was issued from 7 Oct. 1851 to 1908 as the Daily News and other titles. The paper’s predecessors were the weekly Kingston Gazette (25 Sept. 1810–29 Dec. 1818) and the Kingston Chronicle (1 Jan. 1819–22 June 1833)

Chronicle and News. Kingston, Ont. See Chronicle & Gazette

Church. Cobourg, [Ont.]; Toronto; Hamilton, [Ont.]. Published as a weekly from 6 May 1837 to 25 July 1856, first at Cobourg, and then at Toronto from 11 July 1840 to 30 June 1843, at Cobourg again from 14 July 1843 to 3 July 1846, at Toronto from 17 July 1846, and finally at Hamilton from 3 Aug. 1855. Between 5 Aug. 1852 and 16 June 1853 the title was the Canadian Churchman.

Cobourg Star. Cobourg, Ont. Published weekly from 11 Jan. 1831, it became a daily on 15 Nov. 1856, and continued until 1879. Its full title was the Cobourg Star and Newcastle District Gazette until 22 Sept. 1841 when the subtitle was dropped.

Colonial Advocate. Queenston, [Ont.]; Toronto. A weekly founded on 18 May 1824, it moved to York [Toronto] in November 1824. Its full title was Colonial Advocate and Journal of Agriculture, Manufactures and Commerce until 7 Oct. 1824

when it became the Colonial Advocate; in December 1833 it became the Advocate, and on 4 Nov. 1834 it amalgamated with the Canadian Correspondent to form the Correspondent and Advocate.

Daily British Whig. Kingston, Ont. Began publication on 1 Jan. 1849. On 1 Dec. 1926 it merged with the Daily Standard to form the Whig-Standard, which continues to the present. [See also its predecessor, the British Whig (1834–48).]

Examiner. Charlottetown. Published under a variety of titles, it began on 7 Aug. 1847 as a weekly. For a brief period from 23 Feb. 1850 to 7 April 1851 it appeared as a semi-weekly, the Examiner and Semi-Weekly Intelligencer, and from 1877 both daily and weekly editions were published.

Examiner. Toronto. Published as a weekly from 3 July 1838 until 29 Aug. 1855 when it merged with the Globe.

La Gazette de Québec. See Quebec Gazette

Gleaner. Miramichi, N. B.; Chatham, N. B. Published from 28 July 1829 to 1880, it superseded the Miramichi Mercury (1826–29). Its title until 1 Sept. 1835 was Gleaner: and Northumberland Schediasma, and it continued under various other titles, including that of Gleaner: and Northumberland, Kent, Gloucester and Restigouche Commercial and Agricultural Journal in the 1840s and 1850s. The paper appeared weekly except for the period from 23 July to 31 Dec. 1853 when it was issued twice a week.

Globe. Toronto. Began as a weekly on 5 March 1844, became a semi-weekly on 11 Nov. 1846, a tri-weekly on 3 July 1849, and a daily on 3 Oct. 1853. A second weekly series began on 6 July 1849 and continued to 28 Jan. 1914. A second semi-weekly series was published from 19 Oct. 1853 to 2 July 1855 and became a tri-weekly which lasted until 1864. The Western Globe, published weekly in Toronto but issued from London, Upper Canada, lasted from 16 Oct. 1845 until at least 1851. The title became the Globe and Mail when the paper merged with the Daily Mail and Empire on 23 Nov. 1936 and publication continues under this title to the present.

Hamilton Spectator. Hamilton, Ont. Began on 15 July 1846 as the semi-weekly Hamilton Spectator, and Journal of Commerce, and then from July 1855 to December 1864 appeared as the Semi-Weekly Spectator. The Weekly Spectator was added on 23 May 1850, and continued under various titles until December 1894. A daily edition was launched on 10 May 1852 as the Daily Spectator, and Journal of Commerce and appeared under this title until 29 March 1865; after several title changes it became the Hamilton Spectator on 21 March 1890, which continues to the present.

Herald. Toronto. A semi-weekly, published from 28 June 1837 to 1841 as the Commercial Herald and then until 1846 as the Toronto Herald; the paper was issued as the Herald from 1846 until it ceased publication on 30 June 1848.

Islander. Charlottetown. Published as a weekly from 2 Dec. 1842 until June 1874. Its full title was the Islander, or Prince Edward Island Intelligencer and Advertiser until 21 Jan. 1853, when it became the Islander, or Prince Edward Island Weekly Intelligencer and Advertiser, and then in December 1872 the Prince Edward Islander: a Weekly Newspaper of General Intelligence. It was absorbed by the Weekly Patriot in July 1874.

Le Journal de Québec. Published from 1 December 1842 to 1 Oct. 1889

Kingston Chronicle. Kingston, Ont. See Chronicle & Gazette

Kingston Gazette. Kingston, Ont. See Chronicle & Gazette

Lambton Observer, and Western Advertiser. Sarnia, Ont. See Sarnia Observer, and Lambton Advertiser

Leader. Toronto. Began publication as the Weekly Leader on 7 July 1852; the Semi-Weekly Leader followed on 13 July 1852, and the Daily Leader was added on 11 July 1853. All three editions adopted the title Leader in November 1855, although the weekly reverted to Weekly Leader in 1859. The semi-weekly ceased publication on 30 Sept. 1864, but the daily and weekly editions continued until 1878.

Mackenzie’s Weekly Message. Toronto. Published from 27 Jan. 1853 until 15 Sept. 1860. On 15 Aug. 1856 it became the Toronto Weekly Message, and from July 1859 to IS Sept. 1860 it appeared as Mackenzie’s Toronto Weekly Message.

Mélanges réligieux. Montréal. Published from 14 Dec. 1840 to 6 July 1852.

La Minerve. Montréal. Published from 9 Nov. 1826 to 27 May 1899.

Montreal Gazette. First issued on 3 June 1778 as La Gazette du commerce et littérature, pour la ville et district de Montréal. A bilingual continuation of this paper, the Montreal Gazette/La Gazette de

Montréal, began on 3 Aug. 1785. From August 1822 to the present it has appeared only in English, with several changes in title and frequency.

Montreal Herald. Published from 19 Oct. 1811 to 18 Oct. 1857.

Montreal Transcript. Published from 4 Oct. 1836 until around 1865.

Morning Chronicle. Halifax. Published under various titles from 24 Jan. 1844 to the present. It began as a tri-weekly which lasted until 1877; a daily was added on 3 Aug. 1864, and a weekly was also printed from 1844 until around 1926 [see Novascotian]. On 1 Jan. 1949 it merged with the Halifax Herald to become the Chronicle-Herald.

Morning Chronicle. Quebec. Began publication on 18 May 1847.

Morning News. Saint John, N.B. Began publication on 16 Sept. 1839 as the Commercial News and General Advertiser, becoming the Morning News on 3 April 1840. It continued until 8 April 1884 under a variety of titles, of which Morning News was the most common. The paper began as a tri-weekly, a weekly edition being added on 15 Dec. 1847, and a daily on 2 Jan. 1869.

New-Brunswick Courier. Saint John, N. B. A weekly, it was launched on 2 May 1811 and continued until 1865.

New Brunswick Reporter and Fredericton Advertiser. Began publication on 23 Nov. 1844 as the New Brunswick Reporter, with the subtitle being added in 1845. From 17 March to 29 Sept. 1888 it was published jointly with the Temperance Journal and appeared under various combined titles. On 6 Oct. 1888 it became the Reporter and Fredericton Advertiser. It was a weekly except for the period between 3 May 1882 and 10 March 1888 when it was issued semi-weekly.

New-Brunswick Royal Gazette. Saint John; Fredericton. See Royal Gazette

Newfoundlander. St John’s. Published from 1827 until 1884. The paper was a weekly until 29 April 1852, then became a semi-weekly until it ceased publication.

Newfoundland Mercantile Journal. St John’s. A weekly, published from 1816 to 1827.

Newfoundland Patriot. St John’s. See Patriot

Novascotian. Halifax. Published weekly under various titles from 29 Dec. 1824 until some time in 1926, although no issues after 25 Dec. 1925 appear to have survived. Its full title initially was the Novascotian, or Colonial Herald, but on 2 Jan. 1840 it dropped the subtitle. After 1844 it was the weekly edition of the Morning Chronicle.

Nova-Scotia Royal Gazette. Halifax. Published under this title from 3 Jan. 1801 to 9 Feb. 1843. A weekly, it began as the Halifax Gazette on 23 March 1752. It

was continued under various titles, including the Royal Gazette and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser (7 April 1789–30 Dec. 1800). On 16 Feb. 1843the paper became the Royal Gazette, which continues to the present.

Ottawa Citizen. Ottawa. Began publication on 17 April 1844as the weekly Bytown Packet, becoming the Ottawa Citizen on 22 Feb. 1851. A semi-weekly edition also appeared from 4 Oct. 1859and the daily Ottawa Citizen from 15 May 1865; the latter has continued, with a number of title changes, to the present.

Packet. Ottawa. See Ottawa Citizen

La Patrie. Montréal. Published from 24 Feb. 1879to 9 Jan. 1978.

Patriot. Kingston, [Ont.]; Toronto. Began publication in Kingston on 12 Nov. 1829as the weekly Patriot and Farmer’s Monitor. The paper moved to York [Toronto] on 7 Dec. 1832, became a semi-weekly in November 1833, and was changed to the Patriot on 21 March 1834and the Toronto Patriot on 3 Jan. 1840. A second weekly edition was begun around 1849and continued under various titles until October 1878. The Daily Patriot and Express was published from 16 April 1850to November 1855when it was absorbed by the Leader, becoming its evening edition.

Patriot. St John’s. Published from 1833to June 1890as a weekly; issues are available only from 1834. Its full title was the Newfoundland Patriot until 1842, when it became the Patriot & Terra Nova Herald.

Patriot and Farmer’s Monitor. Kingston, [Ont.]; Toronto. See Patriot

Patriot & Terra Nova Herald. St John’s. See Patriot

Le Pays. Montréal. Published from 15 Jan. 1852to 26 Dec. 1871.

Perth Courier. Perth, Ont. See Bathurst Courier

Pilot. Montreal. Published from 5 March 1844to 25 March 1862.

Prince Edward Island Gazette. Charlottetown. See Royal Gazette

Prince Edward Island Register. Charlottetown. See Royal Gazette

Public Ledger. St John’s. Published from about 1820to 1882first as a semi-weekly, then as a tri-weekly, and finally, in 1859, as a daily. Its full title was originally the Public Ledger and Newfoundland General Advertiser; it later appeared under various other titles, including the Daily Ledger, Public Ledger, and Public Ledger and Newfoundland Daily Advertiser.

Quebec Gazette/La Gazette de Québec. Published from 21 June 1764, the paper remained bilingual from 2 May 1832until 30 April 1842, but the

French and English editions were published separately. From 29 Oct. 1842to 30 Oct. 1874only the English edition appeared

Quebec Mercury. Published from 5 Jan. 1805to 1 Oct. 1903.

Royal Gazette. Charlottetown. Published weekly from 24 Aug. 1830to the present, becoming an official government gazette in 1851. Its predecessors include the Weekly Recorder of Prince Edward Island, published from 1810to perhaps 1813, the Prince Edward Island Gazette, published on an irregular basis from 1814to about 1821, and the Prince Edward Island Register, which appeared weekly from 23 July 1823to 17 July 1830.

Royal Gazette. Saint John, N.B.; Fredericton. Published weekly from 11 Oct. 1785to the present, first in Saint John until around February 1814, and then in Fredericton. It appeared originally as the Royal Gazette, and the New-Brunswick Advertiser; since 1 Dec. 1802it has been called simply the Royal Gazette, except from 1808to 1814when it was the Royal Gazette, and New-Brunswick Advertiser and from April 1814to 12 May 1828when it was the New-Brunswick Royal Gazette.

Royal Gazette and Newfoundland Advertiser. St John’s. Published from 27 Aug. 1807as a weekly. In October 1924the paper became the Newfoundland Gazette, the official government gazette which continues to the present.

Royal Gazette and the Nova-Scotia Advertiser. Halifax. See Nova-Scotia Royal Gazette

Sarnia Observer, and Lambton Advertiser. Sarnia, Ont. A weekly, it was published from 16 Nov. 1853to 20 Nov. 1856as the Lambton Observer, and Western Advertiser. On 10 Jan. 1879the title was shortened to Sarnia Observer. A daily edition began publication in 1895and has continued to the present under various titles, including Canadian Observer (1917–57).

Semi-Weekly Leader. Toronto. See Leader

Semi-Weekly Spectator. Hamilton, Ont. See Hamilton Spectator

Times. Halifax. Published weekly from 3 June 1834to 27 June 1848.

Times. London. Published daily from 1785to the present. Its title from 1785to 1788was the Daily Universal Register.

Times and General Commercial Gazette. St John’s. Published from 15 Aug. 1832until 23 March 1895. It was a weekly until 25 Dec. 1844, and thereafter a semi-weekly.

Toronto Herald. See Herald

Toronto Mirror. A weekly, it was published from I July 1837 to 1842 as the Mirror and continued to about 1866.

Toronto Patriot. See Patriot

Upper Canada Gazette. Newark, later Niagara

[Niagara-on-the-Lake, Ont.]; Toronto. Began 18 April 1793 and moved to York [Toronto] after the issue of 25 Aug. 1798. Irregular until 1800, when it became a weekly. Its full title to 28 March 1807 was the Upper Canada Gazette; or American Oracle, from 15 April 1807 to the end of 1816 the York Gazette, and after 1817 the Upper Canada Gazette once more. It is believed to have ceased publication in 1849.

Weekly British Whig. Kingston, Ont. See British Whig

Weekly Recorder of Prince Edward Island. Charlottetown. See Royal Gazette

Weekly Spectator. Hamilton, Ont. See Hamilton Spectator

Western Mercury. Hamilton, Ont. Published weekly and then semi-weekly from 20 Jan. 1831 until about 1835.

ALMANACS. The almanacs have been listed under this heading to facilitate their identification. Because titles within series vary and publishers or editors often change, the almanacs have in the main been listed under a general title, with the specifics found on title-pages following. The information in square brackets is given as a guide and may not be completely accurate.

Belcher’s farmer’s almanack. [Halifax, 1824–1930. ] Edited by Clement Horton Belcher from 1824 to 1870 when its publication was taken over by the firm of McAlpine and Barnes, later the McAlpine Publishing Company. From 1824 to 1831 its title was The farmer’s almanack . . . ; in 1832 it became Belcher’s farmer’s almanack . . . , a title it retained with minor variations until its disappearance.

Canadian almanac. Toronto, 1848– . Publishers: Scobie & Balfour, 1848–50; Hugh Scobie, 1851–54; Maclear & Co., 1855–61; W. C. Chewett & Co., 1862–69; Copp, Clark & Co., 1870 to the present. From 1848 to 1850 its title was Scobie & Balfour’s Canadian almanac, and repository of useful knowledge . . . and from 1851 to 1854 Scobie’s Canadian almanac, and repository of useful knowledge . . . ; it has continued under various other titles, adopting its present name, The Canadian almanac and directory . . . , in 1948.

Halifax almanac. [Published in Halifax from 1790 to at least 1821. ] Its actual title was An almanack . . . calculated for the meridian of Halifax, in Nova-Scotia. . . . Published by John Howe, 1790–1815; David Howe, 1816; John Munro, 1821.

New-Brunswick almanac. [Published at Saint John from 1812 into the 20th century.] Compiled by Bernard Kieran from 1812 to 1824, by Uranophilus from 1825 to 1828, and prepared under the supervision of the Fredericton Athenæum from 1849 to 1851. Published by Henry Chubb, and later by his firm, from 1812 to 1864. From 1812 to 1830 its title was An almanack . . . ; in1832 it became the New-Brunswick almanack . . . ; and in 1849, the New-Brunswick almanac and register. . . .

Neilson and Cowan, 1824–36; S. Neilson, 1837; W. Neilson, 1838–41. Title varies as to spelling and also as to language, but from 1813 to 1841 it was published in English only as The Quebec almanack; and British American royal kalendar. . . .

A bibliography of Canadiana, being items in the Public Library of Toronto, Canada, relating to the early history and development of Canada. Edited by Frances Maria Staton and Marie Tremaine. Toronto, 1934; reprinted 1965.

BOASE, FREDERIC. Modern English biography: containing many thousand concise memoirs of persons who have died between the years 1851–1900, with an index of the most interesting matter. 3 vols. and 3 supplements. Privately printed in Truro, Eng., 1892–1921; reprinted [London], 1965.

BORTHWICK, JOHN DOUGLAS. History and biographi-

cal gazetteer of Montreal to the year 1892. Montreal, 1892.

British Museum general catalogue of printed books. Photolithograhic edition to 1955. 263 vols. London, 1959–66. A new catalogue, The British Library general catalogue of printed books to 1975, began publication in 1979.

BURKE, JOHN. A general and heraldic dictionary of the peerage and baronetage of the United Kingdom. London, 1826. 105th edition. Edited by Peter Townend. 1970.

“Calendar of state papers addressed by the secretaries of state for the colonies to the lieutenant-governors or officers administering the government of the Province of Upper Canada, [1821–1841].” PAC Report, 1935: 171–398; 1936: 399–598; 1937: 599–802.

Canada directory. See DIRECTORIES

Canadian almanac. See ALMANACS

The Canadian biographical dictionary and portrait gallery of eminent and self-made men. 2 vols. Toronto, 1880–81.

COOKE, ALAN, AND CLIVE HOLLAND. The exploration of northern Canada, 500 to 1920: a chronology. Toronto,1978.

CORNISH, GEORGE HENRY. Cyclopœdia of Methodism

in Canada: containing historical, educational, and statistical information, dating from the beginning of the work in the several provinces of the Dominion of Canada, and extending to the annual conferences of 1880. 2 vols. Toronto and Halifax, 1881–1903.

DIRECTORIES. Issued initially as single works, these frequently became regular, usually annual, publications in the 19th century. Because titles within series varied greatly and editors or compilers frequently changed, the directories used in the preparation of volume VIII have been listed below by region and under a general title, with the dates of the relevant years following. Details of various titles and publishers given on title pages, as well as of the places of publication of the Canadian directories cited, can be found in D. E. Ryder, Checklist of Canadian directories, 1790–1950/

Répertoire des annuaires canadiennes (Ottawa, 1979). ForBritish directories, the following sources proved useful: British Museum general catalogue and J. E. Norton, Guide to the national and provincial directories of England and Wales, excluding London, published before 1856 (London, 1950).

Quebec directory, used for 1822 to 1891. Issues cited were The Quebec directory, for 1822, containing an alphabetical list of the merchants, traders, and housekeepers, & c., within the city . . . , comp. T. H. Gleason (Quebec, 1822); The Quebec directory, or strangers’ guide to the city, for 1826; comprising an alphabetical list of the merchants, traders and house keepers within the city . . . , comp. John Smith (Quebec, 1826); The Quebec directory and strangers’ guide to the city and environs, 1844–45, comp. Alfred Hawkins (Quebec, 1844); The Quebec directory, and city and commercial register, 1847–48, comp. Alfred Hawkins (Montreal, 1847); Mackay’s Quebec directory . . . (Quebec), for 1848–49 to

Toronto directory. Toronto. Issues cited in volume VIII include: York commercial directory, street guide, and register, for 1833–4 . . . ,comp. George Walton (York [Toronto], [1833]); The city of Toronto and the Home District commercial directory and register with almanack and calendar for 1837 . . . ,comp. George Walton (1837); The Toronto directory, and street guide, for 1843–4, comp. Francis Lewis (1843); Brown’s Toronto City and Home District directory, 1846–7 . . . (1846); Rowsell’s city of Toronto and county of York directory, for 1850–51 . . . , ed. J. Armstrong (1850); Brown’s Toronto general directory . . .(1856; 1861); Caverhill’s Toronto City directory, for 1859–60 . . . , comp. W. C. F. Caverhill ([ 1859]); Hutchinson’s Toronto directory, 1862– 63 . . . , comp. Thomas Hutchinson ([1862]); and Mitchell & Co.’s general directory for the city of Toronto, and gazetteer of the counties of York and Peel, for 1866 (1866).

A directory of the members of the Legislative Assembly of Nova Scotia, 1758–1958. Introduction by Charles Bruce Fergusson. (PANS publications, Nova Scotia series, 2.) Halifax, 1958.

Early Toronto newspapers, 1793–1867: a catalogue of newspapers published in the town of York and the city of Toronto from the beginning to confederation. Edited by Edith Grace Firth, with an introduction by Henry Cummings Campbell. Toronto, 1961.

GREAT BRITAIN, ADMIRALTY. The navy list. . . . London, 1815– . Issues for 1815 to 1858 were used in vol. VIII.

––––––WAR OFFICE. A list of the general and field-officers, as they rank in the army. . . . [London, 1754–1868.] See also Hart, The new annual army list.

Guide to the reports of the Public Archives of Canada, 1872–1972. Compiled by Françoise Caron-Houle. (PAC publication.) Ottawa, 1975.

Halifax almanac. See ALMANACS

Hamilton directory. See DIRECTORIES

Handbook of American Indians north of Mexico. Edited by Frederick Webb Hodge. 2 parts. (Smithsonian Institution, Bureau of American Ethnology, Bulletin, 30.) Washington, 1907–10; reprinted New York, 1971. The Canadian material in this work has been revised and republished as an appendix to the tenth report of the Geographical Board of Canada, entitled Handbook of Indians of Canada (Ottawa, 1913; repr. New York, 1969).

O’BYRNE, WILLIAM RICHARD. A naval biographical dictionary; comprising the life and services of every living officer in her majesty’s navy, from the rank of the fleet to that of lieutenant, inclusive. . . . London, 1849. New and enlarged edition, 1 volume published and 4 parts of a second. London, 1861, [ 1859–62].

Officers of the British forces in Canada during the War of 1812–15. Compiled by L. Homfray Irving. (Canadian Military Institute publication.) [Welland, Ont.], 1908.

“State papers – Upper Canada, [1791–1841].” PAC Report, 1891: 1–177; 1892: 286–399; 1893: 1–50; 1896: 1–79; 1897: 81–179; 1898: 181–329; 1899: 331–90; 1900: 391–540; 1901: 541–601; 1943: 1–186; 1944: 1–154; 1945: 1–200. From 1943 to 1945 the calendars appeared under the title “Calendar of series Q: a series of state papers composed of the official correspondence of the governors, lieutenant-governors, administrators and other officials of Quebec and Lower and Upper Canada for the years 1760–1841.”

TERRILL, FREDERICK WILLIAM. A chronology of Montreal and of Canada from A.D. 1752 to A.D. 1893, including commercial statistics, historic sketches of commercial corporations and firms and advertisements, arranged to show in what year the several houses and corporate bodies originated; together with calendars of every year from A.D. 1752 to A.D. 1925. Montreal, 1893.

WALBRAN, JOHN THOMAS. British Columbia coast names, 1592–1906, to which are added a few names in adjacent United States territory: their origin and history. . . . (GeographicalBoard of Canada publication.) Ottawa, 1909; reprinted with an introduction by G. P. V. Akrigg, Vancouver, 1971; reprinted Seattle, Wash., and London, 1972.

WALLACE, WILLIAM STEWART. The Macmillan

dictionary of Canadian biography. Edited by William Angus McKay. 4th edition. Toronto, [1978]. First published as The dictionary of Canadian biography (1926).

When was that? A chronological dictionary of important events in Newfoundland down to and including the year 1922; together with an appendix, “St. John’s over a century ago,” by the late J. W. Withers. Compiled by Harris Munden Mosdell. St John’s, 1923.

IV. STUDIES (BOOKS AND THESES)

ABBOTT, MAUDE ELIZABETH [SEYMOUR]. History of medicine in the province of Quebec. Toronto, 1931; Montreal, 1931.

BECK, JAMES MURRAY. The government of Nova Scotia. (Canadian government series, 8.) Toronto, 1957.

––––––Joseph Howe, 2 vols. Kingston, Ont., and Montreal, 1982–83.

1: Conservative reformer, 1804–1848.

2: The Briton becomes Canadian, 1848–1873.

BILL, INGRAHAM EBENEZER. Fifty years with the Baptist ministers and churches of the Maritime provinces of Canada. Saint John, N.B., 1880.

BUCHANAN, ARTHUR WILLIAM PATRICK. The bench and bar of Lower Canada down to 1850. Montreal, 1925.

CAMPBELL, ROBERT. A history of the Scotch Presbyterian Church, St. Gabriel Street, Montreal. Montreal, 1887.

Canada’s smallest province: a history of P.E.I.Edited by Francis William Pius Bolger. [Charlottetown, 1973.]

CANNIFF, WILLIAM. The medical profession in Upper Canada, 1783–1850: an historical narrative, with original documents relating to the profession, including some brief biographies. Toronto, 1894; reprinted 1980.

CARELESS, JAMES MAURICE STOCKFORD. The union of the Canadas: the growth of Canadian institutions, 1841–1857. (Canadian centenary series, 10.) Toronto, 1967.

CARROLL, JOHN [SALTKILL]. Case and his contemporaries; or, the Canadian itinerants’ memorial:

constituting a biographical history of Methodism in Canada, from its introduction into the province, till the death of the Rev. Wm. Case in 1855. 5 vols. Toronto, 1867–77.

CHRISTIE, ROBERT. A history of the late province of Lower Canada, parliamentary and political, from the commencement to the close of its existence as a separate province. . . .6 vols. Quebec and Montreal, 1848–55. [2nd ed.]. Montreal, 1866.

CORNELL, PAUL GRANT. The alignment of political groups in Canada, 1841–1867. (Canadian studies in history and government, 3.) Toronto, 1962.

EATON, ARTHUR WENTWORTH HAMILTON. The history of Kings County, Nova Scotia, heart of the Acadian land; giving a sketch of the French and their expulsion; and a history of the New England planters who came in their stead; with many genealogies, 1604–1910. Salem, Mass., 1910; reprinted as The history of Kings County,Belleville, Ont., 1972.

FRENCH, GOLDWIN [SYLVESTER]. Parsons & politics: the rôle of the Wesleyan Methodists in Upper Canada and the Maritimes from 1780 to 1855. Toronto, 1962.

GREGG, WILLIAM. History of the Presbyterian Church in the Dominion of Canada, from the earliest times to 1834; with a chronological table of events to the present time, and map. Toronto, 1885.

GUILLET, EDWIN CLARENCE. The lives and times of the Patriots; an account of the rebellion in Upper Canada, 1837–1838, and the Patriot agitation in the United States, 1837–1842. Toronto, 1938; reprinted 1963; reprinted 1968.

GUNN, GERTRUDE E. The political history of Newfoundland, 1832–1864. (Canadian studies in history and government, 7.) Toronto, 1966.

History of the county of Middlesex, Canada, from the earliest time to the present; containing an authentic account of many important matters relating to the settlement, progress and general history of the county. . . .Toronto and London, Ont., 1889; reprinted with introduction and corrections by Daniel [James] Brock and index by Muriel Moon, Belleville, Ont., 1972.

LINDSEY, CHARLES. The life and times of Wm. Lyon Mackenzie; with an account of the Canadian rebellion of 1837, and the subsequent frontier disturbances, chiefly from unpublished documents. 2 vols. Toronto, 1862; reprinted 1971.

MAURAULT, OLIVIER. Le collège de Montréal, 1767–1967. 2e édition. Antonio Dansereau, éditeur. Montréal, 1967. The first edition was published in Montreal in 1918 under the title Le petit séminaire de Montréal.

MEILLEUR, JEAN-BAPTISTE. Mémorial de l’éducation

du Bas-Canada. Montréal, 1860. 2e éd. Québec, 1876.

MIDDLETON, JESSE EDGAR. The municipality of Toronto: a history. 3 vols. Toronto and New York, 1923.

MILLMAN, THOMAS REAGH. The life of the Right Reverend, the Honourable Charles James Stewart, D.D., Oxon., second Anglican bishop of Quebec. London, Ont., 1953.

RICH, EDWIN ERNEST. The history of the Hudson’s Bay Company, 1670–1870. (HBRS, 21–22.) 2 vols. London, 1958–59. [Trade edition.] 3 vols. Toronto, 1960. A copy of this work available at the PAC contains notes and bibliographical material omitted from the printed version.

Robertson’s landmarks of Toronto; a collection of historical sketches of the old town of York from 1792 until 1833, and of Toronto from 1834 to

SCADDING, HENRY. Toronto of old: collections and recollections illustrative of the early settlement and social life of the capital of Ontario. Toronto, 1873. Republished as Toronto of old, abridged and edited by Frederick Henry Armstrong. Toronto, 1966.

SMITH, THOMAS WATSON. History of the Methodist Church within the territories embraced in the late conference of Eastern British America, including Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, Prince Edward Island and Bermuda. 2 vols. Halifax, 1877–90.

WYNN, GRAEME. Timber colony: a historical geography of early nineteenth century New Brunswick. Toronto and Buffalo, N.Y., 1981.

V. JOURNALS

Acadiensis: Journal of the History of the Atlantic Region/Revue de l’histoire de la région atlantique. Fredericton. Published by the Department of History of the University of New Brunswick. 1 (1971–72)– .

British Columbia Historical Quarterly. Victoria. Published by the PABC in cooperation with the British Columbia Historical Association. 1 (1937)–21 (1957–58). Author/title and subject indexes are provided by A two-part index to the “British Columbia Historical Quarterly,” volumes I–XXI . . . , published by Camosun College ([Victoria], 1977).

Le Bulletin des recherches historiques. Published usually in Lévis, Qué. Originally the organ of the Société des études historiques, it became in March 1923 the journal of the Bureau des archives de la province de Québec (now the ANQ). 1 (1895)–70 (1968). Index: 1(1895)–31 (1925) (4v., Beauceville, Qué., 1925–26). For subsequent years there is an index on microfiche at the ANQ-Q.

CANADIAN CATHOLIC HISTORICAL ASSOCIATION/SOCIÉTÉ CANADIENNE D’HISTOIRE DE L’ÉGLISE CATHOLIQUE, Ottawa. Publishes simultaneously a Report in English and a Rapport in French, of which the contents are entirely different. 1 (1933–34)– .

Ontario History. Toronto. Published by the Ontario Historical Society. I (1899)– ; vols.l–49 (1957) reprinted Millwood, N.Y., 1975. An index to volumes 1 (1899) to 64 (1972) appears in Index to the publications of the Ontario Historical Society, 1899–1972 (1974). Title varies: Papers and Records to 1946.

WATERLOO HISTORICAL SOCIETY, Kitchener, Ont. Annual report. 1913– . Place of publication or printing varies: at Berlin [Kitchener], 1913–15, at Kitchener, 1916–24 and 1931– , at Toronto, 1925–26, and at Waterloo, Ont., 1927–30. Title varies: Annual volume, 1957–64; since 1965 the reports have been untitled, appearing simply under the Society’s name.

Nous reconnaissons l’appui du gouvernement du Canada par l’entremise du ministère du Patrimoine canadien.We acknowledge the support of the Government of Canada through the Department of Canadian Heritage.

Nous reconnaissons l'aide financière du Musée canadien de l'histoire à travers les œuvres du programme de référence en ligne financés par le gouvernement du Canada.We acknowledge the financial support of the Canadian Museum of History through the Online Works of Reference Program funded by the Government of Canada.